Legally, there is no such thing as "home country". That is entirely a personal concept.
However, certain countries (the U.S. being one of them), do distinguish between citizens who were born inside the country, and those who weren't. In the U.S., the only place this distinction matters is eligibility to hold the office of President or Vice President. Otherwise, it is irrelevant.
Yes if you can get citizenship for that child in your home country.
In general a the country in which a child is born is considered its place of birth so a US child can not be born outside of the US. If you are a US citizen but your child is born while you are on a trip to Canada your child will be a Canadian Citizan.
If the parents are US citizens, then the child gets duel citizenship (citizenship in the country he/she is born in [depending on local laws], and US citizenship). Any person naturalized in the US or by American parents is a US citizen.
They child is a us citizen if born in the us.
Any child born in the US is considered a US citizen.
Yes, if born in the US, the child is automatically an American citizen.
No because the law does not care about your parents or where they were born just where the child was born
If one or more of the parents is a US citizen, the child is a US citizen, regardless of where they are born.
The child of a US citizen is considered a US citizen.
Oklahoma has been neither the birth state nor the home state of any U. S. Vice Presidents to date.
If your child is born in the USA, they automatically become a US citizen.
Alaska